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秘密直播 APL鈥檚 Camera Reveals Surprise for NASA鈥檚 Lucy Mission in First Asteroid Encounter

Scientists and engineers on got a late Halloween treat on Nov. 1 when the spacecraft returned images of its first asteroid encounter. What was expected to be just one asteroid came back as two. Dinkinesh, the small main belt asteroid that Lucy was targeting, turns out to be a binary.

Lucy team members had already suspected this might be the case, having noticed in the weeks before the encounter that the asteroid鈥檚 brightness was varying in an unpredicted way. Now, the images captured by the (L鈥橪ORRI) instrument 鈥 built for the mission by the 秘密直播 Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland 鈥 remove all doubt.

鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 have hoped for something this spectacular when developing L鈥橪ORRI because we had no idea,鈥 said APL鈥檚 , the L鈥橪ORRI instrument principal investigator. 鈥淏ut the results are nothing short of remarkable. The instrument worked flawlessly and has already made an unexpected discovery. We鈥檙e overjoyed.鈥

Dinkinesh 鈥 an Ethiopian name meaning 鈥測ou are wonderful鈥 鈥 and its small satellite are petite. A preliminary analysis of the new images indicates the larger of the two asteroids is just around 0.5 miles (790 meters) at its widest. The smaller one is roughly 0.15 miles (220 m) in size.

鈥淒inkinesh really did live up to its name; this is marvelous,鈥 said Hal Levison, the principal investigator for Lucy from the Boulder, Colorado, branch of the San-Antonio-based Southwest Research Institute. 鈥淲hen Lucy was originally selected for flight, we planned to fly by seven asteroids. With the addition of Dinkinesh, two Trojan moons, and now this satellite, we鈥檝e turned it up to 11.鈥

Ultimately destined to explore the Jupiter Trojan asteroids 鈥 relics of the early solar system that orbit well ahead of and behind the gas giant 鈥 Lucy鈥檚 stop at Dinkinesh was to test its Terminal Tracking, a system that will make it possible for the spacecraft to autonomously track an asteroid while flying by at 10,000 mph (16,000 kph).

Even so, Lucy team scientists are excitedly poring over the new data to glean insights into the nature of our solar system鈥檚 small asteroids.

Over the next week, they鈥檒l downlink the remainder of the spacecraft鈥檚 data from the encounter. The information returned will give the team insights into the spacecraft鈥檚 behavior, helping them prepare for the next encounter with the main belt asteroid Donaldjohanson in April 2025 and their first rendezvous with the Trojan asteroids in 2027.

Adapted from a NASA news release.